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Miss bimbo review
Miss bimbo review






miss bimbo review

  • And for Pete’s sake, how did Sam Dede outrun those three young men in the opening scene.
  • At the start of the film, he accosts Ani for the loan and while Ani is a middle-aged man, he doesn’t look it.
  • A small plot hole problem: the man who loaned Ani money twenty-five years before the film opened, it seems the man never aged.
  • Yes, we say it enough, but it does not hurt to reiterate that. The scene he confronts Stella Damasus and picks two packs of noodles: Gold.
  • The original rating is 6.5, but for Bimbo, we added a 0.5.
  • #MISS BIMBO REVIEW TV#

    Keep track of upcoming films and TV shows with our calendar tool. You can share your thoughts in the comments section or on our social media accounts. A savant actor with far more talent than the industry is crediting her with. A third act insistent on a happy ending when it could have been more. A story built on the grim realities of life concluded with the fanatic convenience of fiction. Its ending feels a tad too convenient, bordering unbelievability. The story suffers, however, with its melodramatic tilt for its resolution. Only in the third act is her job revealed, and it is, yet again, credit to the narrative structure, because the clues have been set up from the first act. She is beyond ready for a role as lead in a well-written drama.īimbo Ademoye’s Anu, like her father, Ani, also has a dark secret to how she has kept the family afloat poverty. (Maybe her role in Breaded Life, but here, in Gone, she has a more mature, less comedic responsibility to deliver as an actor.) We need to take Bimbo Ademoye more seriously pull her away from the ugly gnaws of stereotypical comic-relief supporting actor roles.

    miss bimbo review

    Not since Gone has Bimbo played a character more fully-rounded, more acceptably complete. We must credit the film, written and directed by Daniel Ademinokan, for providing a character interesting enough for her to work with. She switches effortlessly from affable sister obedient, responsible daughter her mother’s defender to an emotional wreck with daddy issues. Gone, apparently, is the pristine place to see Bimbo Ademoye. Three years after her debut in 2015, Bimbo Ademoye plays Anu, daughter to Sam Dede’s troubled character, and sister to Ayo, the brilliantly portrayed Gabriel Afolayan character. The foundation to Bimbo Ademoye’s successful portrayals in Sugar Rush or Breaded Life is evident here in Gone. (Her role in Nneka the Pretty Serpent works as a fine example here.) Although there is a level of jocundity her performances rely on family roles and ride-or-die friendships, where she can be overly familiar with most of the characters she plays across from. Bimbo’s strength is her ability to make a small role appear complete. Within that time-span, Bimbo has featured in a number of successful films, with Sugar Rush as the flagship of her reel. Six years later, it feels as though her rise has been meteoric. In 2015, Bimbo Ademoye made her debut in Bunmi Ajakaiye’s film, It’s About Your Husband, where she played a gullible concubine.








    Miss bimbo review